The mysterious 'execution-style' killings of 3 young Muslims in Fort Wayne

Fort Wayne police investigating 3 males found dead in home

Authorities in Indiana are seeking information after two men and a teenager who were part of an African community were found shot to death last week inside a Fort Wayne home.

Authorities in Indiana are seeking information after two men and a teenager who were part of an African community were found shot to death last week inside a Fort Wayne home.

Peter HolleyThe Washington Post

Police in Fort Wayne, Indiana, are investigating the deaths of three young Muslim Americans who were killed "execution-style" last week.

The three victims - 23-year-old Mohamedtaha Omar, 20-year-old Adam Mekki and 17-year-old Muhannad Tairab - were discovered with multiple gunshot wounds inside a home that police labeled a "party house," according to ABC affiliate WPTA-TV.

They were members of a diaspora community from Africa's eastern Sahel region, according to Al Jazeera.

"These young people were just starting out in their life," Fort Wayne Police Chief Garry Hamilton told WANE TV.

Police said the home was a place with little supervision, where young people in their teens and early 20s gathered for fun. The home was on the radar of Fort Wayne police's gang and violent crimes unit in recent weeks, but Hamilton told the Fort Wayne Journal Gazette that the victims did not have any known gang affiliations. The owners of the home live in Indianapolis, the paper reported.

"A lot of people would come and go to the residence," Hamilton said. "We talked to neighbors, and a lot of young people would come and go to this house."

Investigators said they believe the killings occurred within a one-hour window or so, between the time a group of people left the home and later returned to find the victims. Hamilton said it would be hard for one person to carry out three killings at once, leading investigators to suspect that more than one person was involved in the crime. Investigators have not released a motive for the killings.

Rusty York, the city's public safety director, told WPTA-TV that investigators do not think the killing was motivated by the victims' religious affiliation.

"Hopefully, you know, we'll be able to focus in on exactly what the reason was, but as I said before, no reason to believe this was any type of hate crime, or focused because of their religion or their nationality whatsoever," he said.

Hamilton told the Journal Gazette that he had been meeting since last week with the victims' families as well as members of the city's African community. He told the paper that he asked for the FBI's assistance in case investigators find a link between the victim's religion and their deaths.

During Omar and Tairab's funeral on Saturday, Hamilton urged the public to step forward with information about the crime, according to CNN.

"I need someone to come and tell me what they know," he said. "Please, I'm asking for your help and your mercy to bring justice for these young men."